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Journalist Claims There's Evidence of Prince William's Affair With Rose Hanbury
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The Duke of Cambridge previously has taken a legal action against the British media after rumors surfaced in 2019 of him cheating on Kate Middleton with her former close friend during her pregnancy with their third child.

AceShowbiz - Prince William is facing affair allegation yet again. After the rumors of his alleged affair with Rose Hanbury first surfaced in 2019, a journalist has now claimed that there's evidence of the prince's supposed infidelity.

Journalist Alex Tiffin resurfaced the issue on Twitter on Tuesday, December 28 when responding to a Daily Mail editor's tweet that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's "criticism of unnamed 'racist' royals has increased the danger of attacks on the Royal Family."

"Deputy Editor of race baiting newspaper trying to divert attention from the huge L in court," Alex tweeted. "Also, I'd rather the media just named Prince William as the person in question, instead of pussy footing about it, like they did his affair with the Rose lassie."

Alex went on referencing William's alleged affair with Rose, "PS. Injunctions from the High Court in London are worthless in Scotland, my residence and no amount of legal pressure is going to erase the fact Prince William had an affair with Rose Hanbury."

"Multiple UK news outlets have had evidence of the affair and his other comments, some even spoke of them on this site before legal threats saw them delete," he insisted. "A Royal shouldn't be afforded extra protection from scrutiny than any other public figure."

Journalist Resurfaced Prince William's Affair Rumors

Journalist Alex Tiffin resurfaced rumors of Prince William's alleged affair.

Back in 2019, In Touch published an article alleging that Prince William cheated on Kate Middleton with her former close friend Rose while she was pregnant with their third child, Prince Louis. The tabloid suggested that these rumors had "rocked the palace and their marriage."

In May of that year, The Daily Beast reported that "at least one British publication [had] been served with legal warnings after publishing details of the [affair] rumors by the royals' lawyers." The warning forbid news outlets from repeating the "false and highly damaging" claims first published by the U.S. gossip site.

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